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Slavery uncovered in Qatari World Cup projects

whall15

Coach
Messages
15,871
Dozens of Nepalese migrant labourers have died in Qatar in recent weeks and thousands more are enduring appalling labour abuses, a Guardian investigation has found, raising serious questions about Qatar's preparations to host the 2022 World Cup.


This summer, Nepalese workers died at a rate of almost one a day in Qatar, many of them young men who had sudden heart attacks. The investigation found evidence to suggest that thousands of Nepalese, who make up the single largest group of labourers in Qatar, face exploitation and abuses that amount to modern-day slavery, as defined by the International Labour Organisation, during a building binge paving the way for 2022.


According to documents obtained from the Nepalese embassy in Doha, at least 44 workers died between 4 June and 8 August. More than half died of heart attacks, heart failure or workplace accidents.


The investigation also reveals:
•Evidence of forced labour on a huge World Cup infrastructure project.
• Some Nepalese men have alleged that they have not been paid for months and have had their salaries retained to stop them running away.
• Some workers on other sites say employers routinely confiscate passports and refuse to issue ID cards, in effect reducing them to the status of illegal aliens.
• Some labourers say they have been denied access to free drinking water in the desert heat.
• About 30 Nepalese sought refuge at their embassy in Doha to escape the brutal conditions of their employment.


The allegations suggest a chain of exploitation leading from poor Nepalese villages to Qatari leaders. The overall picture is of one of the richest nations exploiting one of the poorest to get ready for the world's most popular sporting tournament.


"We'd like to leave, but the company won't let us," said one Nepalese migrant employed at Lusail City development, a $45bn (£28bn) city being built from scratch which will include the 90,000-seater stadium that will host the World Cup final. "I'm angry about how this company is treating us, but we're helpless. I regret coming here, but what to do? We were compelled to come just to make a living, but we've had no luck."


The body tasked with organising the World Cup, the Qatar 2022 Supreme Committee, told the Guardian that work had yet to begin on projects directly related to the World Cup. However, it said it was "deeply concerned with the allegations that have been made against certain contractors/sub-contractors working on Lusail City's construction site and considers this issue to be of the utmost seriousness". It added: "We have been informed that the relevant government authorities are conducting an investigation into the allegations."


The Guardian's investigation also found men throughout the wider Qatari construction industry sleeping 12 to a room in places and getting sick through repulsive conditions in filthy hostels. Some say they have been forced to work without pay and left begging for food.


"We were working on an empty stomach for 24 hours; 12 hours' work and then no food all night," said Ram Kumar Mahara, 27. "When I complained, my manager assaulted me, kicked me out of the labour camp I lived in and refused to pay me anything. I had to beg for food from other workers."


Almost all migrant workers have huge debts from Nepal, accrued in order to pay recruitment agents for their jobs. The obligation to repay these debts, combined with the non-payment of wages, confiscation of documents and inability of workers to leave their place of work, constitute forced labour, a form of modern-day slavery estimated to affect up to 21 million people across the globe. So entrenched is this exploitation that the Nepalese ambassador to Qatar, Maya Kumari Sharma, recently described the emirate as an "open jail".
Nepal-embassy-record-008.jpg

Record of deaths in July 2013, from all causes, held by the Nepalese embassy in Doha. Photograph: /guardian.co.uk

"The evidence uncovered by the Guardian is clear proof of the use of systematic forced labour in Qatar," said Aidan McQuade, director of Anti-Slavery International, which was founded in 1839. "In fact, these working conditions and the astonishing number of deaths of vulnerable workers go beyond forced labour to the slavery of old where human beings were treated as objects. There is no longer a risk that the World Cup might be built on forced labour. It is already happening."


Qatar has the highest ratio of migrant workers to domestic population in the world: more than 90% of the workforce are immigrants and the country is expected to recruit up to 1.5 million more labourers to build the stadiums, roads, ports and hotels needed for the tournament. Nepalese account for about 40% of migrant labourers in Qatar. More than 100,000 Nepalese left for the emirate last year.


The murky system of recruitment brokers in Asia and labour contractors in Qatar leaves them vulnerable to exploitation. The supreme committee has insisted that decent labour standards will be set for all World Cup contracts, but underneath it a complex web of project managers, construction firms and labour suppliers, employment contractors and recruitment agents operate.


According to some estimates, Qatar will spend $100bn on infrastructure projects to support the World Cup. As well as nine state-of-the-art stadiums, the country has committed to $20bn worth of new roads, $4bn for a causeway connecting Qatar to Bahrain, $24bn for a high-speed rail network, and 55,000 hotel rooms to accommodate visiting fans and has almost completed a new airport.


The World Cup is part of an even bigger programme of construction in Qatar designed to remake the tiny desert kingdom over the next two decades. Qatar has yet to start building stadiums for 2022, but has embarked on the big infrastructure projects likesuch as Lusail City that, according to the US project managers, Parsons, "will play a major role during the 2022 Fifa World Cup". The British engineering company Halcrow, part of the CH2M Hill group, is a lead consultant on the Lusail project responsible for "infrastructure design and construction supervision". CH2M Hill was recently appointed the official programme management consultant to the supreme committee. It says it has a "zero tolerance policy for the use of forced labour and other human trafficking practices".


Halcrow said: "Our supervision role of specific construction packages ensures adherence to site contract regulation for health, safety and environment. The terms of employment of a contractor's labour force is not under our direct purview."


Some Nepalese working at Lusail City tell desperate stories. They are saddled with huge debts they are paying back at interest rates of up to 36%, yet say they are forced to work without pay.


"The company has kept two months' salary from each of us to stop us running away," said one man who gave his name as SBD and who works at the Lusail City marina. SBD said he was employed by a subcontractor that supplies labourers for the project. Some workers say their subcontrator has confiscated their passports and refused to issue the ID cards they are entitled to under Qatari law. "Our manager always promises he'll issue [our cards] 'next week'," added a scaffolder who said he had worked in Qatar for two years without being given an ID card.


Without official documentation, migrant workers are in effect reduced to the status of illegal aliens, often unable to leave their place of work without fear of arrest and not entitled to any legal protection. Under the state-run kafala sponsorship system, workers are also unable to change jobs or leave the country without their sponsor company's permission.


A third worker, who was equally reluctant to give his name for fear of reprisal, added: "We'd like to leave, but the company won't let us. If we run away, we become illegal and that makes it hard to find another job. The police could catch us at any time and send us back home. We can't get a resident permit if we leave."


Other workers said they were forced to work long hours in temperatures of up to 50C (122F) without access to drinking water.


grieving-parents-Nepal-007.jpg

Dalli Kahtri and her husband, Lil Man, hold photos of their sons, both of whom died while working as migrants in Malaysia and Qatar. Their younger son (foreground photo) died in Qatar from a heart attack, aged 20. Photograph: Peter Pattison/guardian.co.uk

The Qatari labour ministry said it had strict rules governing working in the heat, the provision of labour and the prompt payment of salaries.
"The ministry enforces this law through periodic inspections to ensure that workers have in fact received their wages in time. If a company does not comply with the law, the ministry applies penalties and refers the case to the judicial authorities."


Lusail Real Estate Company said: "Lusail City will not tolerate breaches of labour or health and safety law. We continually instruct our contractors and their subcontractors of our expectations and their contractual obligations to both us and individual employees. The Guardian have highlighted potentially illegal activities employed by one subcontractor. We take these allegations very seriously and have referred the allegations to the appropriate authorities for investigation. Based on this investigation, we will take appropriate action against any individual or company who has found to have broken the law or contract with us."


The workers' plight makes a mockery of concerns for the 2022 footballers.


"Everyone is talking about the effect of Qatar's extreme heat on a few hundred footballers," said Umesh Upadhyaya, general secretary of the General Federation of Nepalese Trade Unions. "But they are ignoring the hardships, blood and sweat of thousands of migrant workers, who will be building the World Cup stadiums in shifts that can last eight times the length of a football match."

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/sep/25/revealed-qatars-world-cup-slaves
 

Big Sam

First Grade
Messages
8,976
Qatar World Cup investigation: Imagine if Australia won 2022 bid, a sports-mad country wanting to put on party

If Fifa had done the right thing and acknowledged Australia's rightful claim. Fifa would not be in the mess it is now, drowning in petro-dollars.

By Henry Winter
11:57AM GMT 18 Mar 2014

Imagine a World Cup in an honest, welcoming, sports-mad country, whose emerging football league would be transformed by local stadia hosting global superstars. Imagine a World Cup where organisers are motivated primarily by a desire to put on a great party for the world. Imagine a World Cup in Australia.
Australia bid for the right to host 2022 but were outmuscled by Qatar, who won by a bizarre landslide, ahead of the United States, South Korea and (separately) Japan at the Dec 2, 2010 vote in Zurich. It was laughable that such a serious bid as Australia should finish last. It summed up Fifa's tainted voting system that the most legitimate bid went out in the first round. It is no surprise that half of the 22 ExCo members involved have since stepped down, some of them totally discredited. This was the vote that probity forgot.
Let us take the alternatives to 2022. The US, for all its magnificent arenas and powerful media, have staged the competition before as have South Korea and Japan. The competition should be pioneering, pushing back the boundaries. Qatar could not be taken seriously from a footballing perspective; there could be no serious footballing legacy from holding the event in such an artificial environment. No integrity.
Fifa argued that the competition should go to a nation where it would nourish football's roots. Australia crave "soccer" games. The enormous crowds that Manchester United and Liverpool pulled in last summer respectively in Sydney (83,127) and Melbourne (95,446) highlights the passion.
The obvious contender was Australia. It accrued one vote. One vote! Imagine if Fifa had done the right thing and acknowledged Australia's rightful claim. Fifa would not be in the mess it is now, drowning in petro-dollars. Renewed allegations linking Qatar with financial inducements are of little surprise. The miscreants named in the story, Mohamed Bin Hammam and the particularly despicable Jack Warner, are now beyond football's jurisdiction, having no role in the game, but Fifa could remove the tournament from Qatar.
It's a pipe-dream of course because the pipe is full of gas and oil. Qatar 2022 will make Fifa fortunes. What Fifa has to combat is the perception that Qatar 2022 has already made people fortunes. Zurich must also address the accusation that Qatar and Fifa are perfect partners: autocratic and money-driven.
Fifa's Teflon man, Sepp Blatter, will again emerge unscathed as he voted for the United States. Fifa needs to act but won't. It is committed to Qatar. Fifa is already taking on European leagues by proposing the desert event takes place in winter, so that players will not keel over in the heat or fans melt on the way to the stadia (and globally-warmed heaven knows what all that stadium air-conditioning does to the environment).
Imagine if 2022 were in Australia. There would be broadcasting issues, frustrations in Europe over kick-off times, but that does not lessen the excitement English cricket fans feel for the Ashes when staged at the MCG etc. Anyway, sporting competitions should not be based solely on the viewing habits of Euro-man. Inevitable changes to working patterns over the next decade, blurring night and day shifts, make time-zones even less of an issue.
Imagine the weather in Australia in June and July, their winter, perfect for a football competition. Imagine the nightlife for fans, the days out on beaches, the trips to incredible places like the Great Barrier Reef or marvelling at the view from the top of the Sydney Harbour Bridge. Some of the most iconic stadia names would be used: MCG, Stadium Australia of Olympics fame and the Adelaide Oval. Imagine Australia 2022.
Sadly it won't happen. Qatar will host the World Cup and visiting fans will just have to pinch their noses at the stench.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/fo...orts-mad-country-wanting-to-put-on-party.html

Wonderful article from England's best football writer IMO. Just a shame it wasn't said 4 years ago.
 

Tommax25

Bench
Messages
2,959
Unfortunately the article has it spot on. It is and was a pipedream to think Australia could have won. People surely realised this from the outset with the money Qatar has been pouring into football in recent years in combination with the rampant corruption that has been occurring for years in FIFA. Money talks. Nothing else even comes to the table.
 

shiznit

Coach
Messages
14,860
I always thought Australia would have been great hosts... They just tick so many boxes.

Broadcasting times seem to be the biggest problem... But IMO... It's not as big of a deal as some make out... It's only a couple of hours ahead of Japan and South Korea... And they hosted it...

I thought Australia were the best option... But I thought the USA would get the votes...

I didn't mind either of those 2 getting it.

I think if anyone can get FIFA to change its mind it's gonna be UEFA or maybe a collective of the big european leagues.... Because of the effect it's going to have on the domestic leagues in Europe.

Maybe if all the clubs and leagues threaten not to release the players for the tournament if Qatar hosts it.
 

Big Sam

First Grade
Messages
8,976
Fifa chief’s son got Qatar hospital job after country won World Cup vote

Son of Fifa official moved to work in Qatar after country got World Cup vote

By Claire Newell, Holly Watt, Cecile Schoon and Ben Bryant
11:08PM BST 04 May 2014

A senior Fifa official’s son was given a job at a private Qatari hospital shortly after the decision to award the country the 2022 World Cup.
Pieter D’Hooghe, who is the son of the Belgian executive committee member and medical officer Michel D’Hooghe, was approached by a surgeon at Aspetar hospital in February 2011 and asked if he would start a “visiting surgery” at the clinic.
In 2012, he started working at Aspetar permanently and moved with his family to Doha.
Pieter’s father, Michel, was one of 22 people who awarded Russia and Qatar the 2018 and 2022 tournaments. It is unclear which bids he supported because the votes are cast in secret.
However, the news about the approach to his son only three months after the decision in Switzerland will raise questions about the relationship between some officials and countries that bid to host the event.
Pieter D’Hooghe denied that his appointment at Aspetar was connected to the World Cup bidding process and said that he was a “well recognised sports surgeon”. His Michel said: “I did not exchange my son for a vote for Qatar. In fact, my family was very disappointed that my son left his successful job in Belgium to go to Qatar”.
Since the decision to award Russia and Qatar the tournaments Fifa has faced repeated calls to rerun the contest.
Both Qatar and Russia have always denied wrongdoing, but many people have expressed concern over the decision to hold the football competition in a desert state where temperatures hover around 104F (40C).
Pieter D’Hooghe is not the only relative of a Fifa official who has gained employment with a Qatari organisation following the vote in 2010.
Laurent, the son of Michel Platini, the executive committee member for France and president of Uefa, became the chief executive of Burrda, a Qatar-owned sports company.
Michel Platini has always said that his son’s role was completely unconnected to him voting for Qatar to host the World Cup.
Aspetar is a private orthopaedic and sports medicine hospital in the Gulf. The organisation’s director-general is Dr Khalifa Jeham AlKuwari, who is also the chairman of the Qatar Olympic Committee’s medical commission. According to Aspetar’s website, the medical centre “provides the highest possible medical treatment for sports-related injuries in a state-of-the-art facility, staffed by some of the world’s leading sports medicine practitioners and researchers”.
The centre appears to have close links to Fifa and in 2009, Aspetar was officially accredited as a Fifa Medical Centre of Excellence.
Several high-profile footballers have been treated there, including Didier Drogba, a former Chelsea striker.

http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/fo...tal-job-after-country-won-World-Cup-vote.html

More crookedness.
 

Big Sam

First Grade
Messages
8,976
Qatar World Cup: '£3m payments to officials' corruption claim

David Bond
BBC SPORTS EDITOR
31 May 2014
Last updated at 22:27

Fifa is facing fresh allegations of corruption over its controversial decision to award the 2022 World Cup to Qatar.
The Sunday Times has obtained millions of secret documents - emails, letters and bank transfers - which it alleges are proof that the disgraced Qatari football official Mohamed Bin Hammam made payments totalling US$5m (£3m) to football officials in return for their support for the Qatar bid.
Qatar 2022 and Bin Hammam have always strenuously denied the former Fifa vice-president actively lobbied on their behalf in the run-up to the vote in December 2010.
But, according to emails obtained by the Sunday Times and seen by the BBC, it is now clear that Bin Hammam, 65, was lobbying on his country's behalf at least a year before the decision.
The documents also show how Bin Hammam was making payments direct to football officials in Africa to allegedly buy their support for Qatar in the contest.
Qatar strongly deny any wrongdoing and insist that Bin Hammam never had any official role supporting the bid and always acted independently from the Qatar 2022 campaign.
When approached by the Sunday Times to respond to their claims, Bin Hammam's son Hamad Al Abdulla declined to comment on his behalf.
Although the vast majority of the officials did not have a vote, the Sunday Times alleges Bin Hammam's strategy was to win a groundswell of support for the Qatari bid which would then influence the four African Fifa executive committee members who were able to take part in the election.
The Sunday Times also alleges that it has documents which prove Bin Hammam paid 305,000 Euros (£250,000) to cover the legal expenses of another former Fifa executive committee member from Oceania, Reynald Temarii.
Temarii, from Tahiti, was unable to vote in the contest as he had already been suspended by Fifa after he was caught out by a Sunday Times sting asking bogus American bid officials for money in return for his support.
But the paper now alleges that Bin Hammam provided him with financial assistance to allow him to appeal against the Fifa suspension, delaying his removal from the executive committee and blocking his deputy David Chung from voting in the 2022 election.
The paper claims that had Chung been allowed to vote he would have supported Qatar's rivals Australia. Instead there was no representative from Oceania allowed to vote, a decision which may have influenced the outcome in Qatar's favour.
The paper also makes fresh allegations about the relationship between Bin Hammam and his disgraced Fifa ally Jack Warner, from Trinidad.
Although Warner was forced to resign as a Fifa vice-president in 2011, after it was proved he helped Bin Hammam bribe Caribbean football officials in return for their support in his bid to oust the long-standing Fifa president Sepp Blatter, the paper says it has evidence which shows more than $1.6m was paid by Bin Hammam to Warner, including $450,000 in the period before the vote.
The new allegations will place Fifa under fresh pressure to re-run the vote for the 2022 World Cup, which was held in conjunction with the vote for the 2018 tournament, in which England were eliminated in the first round with just two votes.
Fifa's chief investigator Michael Garcia is already conducting a long-running inquiry into allegations of corruption and wrongdoing during the 2018/22 decisions. He is due to meet senior officials from the Qatar 2022 organising committee in Oman on Monday.
But that meeting may now have to be postponed in light of the Sunday Times revelations which have raised important new questions about the link between Bin Hammam and the successful Qatari World Cup campaign.

Mohamed bin Hammam

Bin Hammam was initially banned from football for life in July 2011 after being found guilty of attempted bribery.

The allegations centred around bids to buy votes in the Fifa presidential election of that year.

However his ban was annulled a year later by the Court of Arbitration for Sport which said there was insufficient evidence to support the punishment.

Bin Hammam then quit football saying he had seen the "very ugly face of football".

Fifa issued him with a second life ban in December 2012 for "conflicts of interest" while he was president of the Asian Football Confederation.

In March 2014, the Daily Telegraph reported a company owned by Bin Hammam had paid former Fifa vice-president Jack Warner and his family more than £1m. Payments were claimed to have been made shortly after Qatar won the right to host the 2022 World Cup.

http://www.bbc.co.uk/sport/0/football/27652181

Blatter will strip them of the tournament and give it to the States. He never liked bin Hamman and voted for the US.
 

Misanthrope

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
47,624
I always thought Australia would have been great hosts... They just tick so many boxes.

Broadcasting times seem to be the biggest problem... But IMO... It's not as big of a deal as some make out... It's only a couple of hours ahead of Japan and South Korea... And they hosted it...

I thought Australia were the best option... But I thought the USA would get the votes...

I didn't mind either of those 2 getting it.

I think if anyone can get FIFA to change its mind it's gonna be UEFA or maybe a collective of the big european leagues.... Because of the effect it's going to have on the domestic leagues in Europe.

Maybe if all the clubs and leagues threaten not to release the players for the tournament if Qatar hosts it.

Australia was hindered on two fronts:

a). Not suitable for international TV airing in prime markets
b). Our bid was just shit: full of cliches, no real effort made to explain the game's history in Australia or the legacy the World Cup would leave, uninspired host city selection, and a f**king animated kangaroo.
 
Messages
13,811
it doesn't even need to be Australia, just Qatar is a f**king nightmare. Theres a lot of strong reasons not to have it there:

-It's hot as shit
-will likely be changed to december, will disrupt club football.
-If any teams have jewish players, they will either be banned from entering the country or will be under constant threat.
-Jewish fans most certainly won't be able to attend.
-I know it's a long shot but what if Israel qualify?
-Gay people won't be allowed to go.
-No drinking allowed, go to the games and then go back to the hotel room, not the party atmosphere you would expect at a world cup.

Plus the slavery and bribery that we know has happened. Terrible terrible choice.
 

ME SO HORNBY!

Juniors
Messages
2,324
Australia or USA. They were always the best two options available. End this farce now and strip Qatar of the World Cup.
 

Big Sam

First Grade
Messages
8,976
It's in Blatter's interests to let this drag out for a little while still so it permanently taints his rival for 2015, Platini. Platini's up to his neck in shit when it comes to Qatar from lobbying Sarkozy to having his son now working for them.

Blatter always wanted the States in 2022 (voted for them) and China in 2026. Qatar stuffed up both plans.

I think he'll pledge a full review as part of his re-election campaign and subsequently strip them of the tournament. Then you won't have the summer/winter farce and potential compensation payout to deal with.

He's a crooked bastard old Sepp but a very canny operator.
 

shiznit

Coach
Messages
14,860
By 2022, Asia will be the world's prime TV market. We're perfectly positioned.


We had every major city plus regional towns like Townsville, Geelong, and Newcastle.
I know I'm pushing my own barrow here a bit... :lol:

But I actually wondered why Australia didn't throw NZ a bone and tried to co-host the tournament.

Obviously have the majority of the games in Australia... But give a pool or 2 to NZ... And maybe some knock out or opening games...

It would allow Australia to split costs with the bid... Ease the stadium requirements... But more importantly....

It would allow them to play the Oceania card.... Oceania being the only confederation who hasn't hosted the World Cup... You could get real support to get the last of the confederations to host the event.

3/4s of a tournament would surely be better then nothing for Australia wouldn't it??
 

Misanthrope

Moderator
Staff member
Messages
47,624
By 2022, Asia will be the world's prime TV market. We're perfectly positioned.


We had every major city plus regional towns like Townsville, Geelong, and Newcastle.

That argument was made at the time. It's a pity FIFA's concerns are more with keeping the US and European markets satisfied.

As to the 'uninspired venue selection', I should have said more than it was uninspiring in its lack of a vision for the future of the game in Australia. Places like Geelong and Townsville featured without actually having any real footballing future proposed.

it doesn't even need to be Australia, just Qatar is a f**king nightmare. Theres a lot of strong reasons not to have it there:

-It's hot as shit
-will likely be changed to december, will disrupt club football.
-If any teams have jewish players, they will either be banned from entering the country or will be under constant threat.
-Jewish fans most certainly won't be able to attend.
-I know it's a long shot but what if Israel qualify?
-Gay people won't be allowed to go.
-No drinking allowed, go to the games and then go back to the hotel room, not the party atmosphere you would expect at a world cup.

Plus the slavery and bribery that we know has happened. Terrible terrible choice.

I believe they have made several statements regarding their willingness to 'accept Israel should they qualify', as well as with regards to homosexual fans and setting up designated 'party zones' for drinking.

But yes, all good reasons why the Cup should never have gone there.
 
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